February 1903

Month in 1903 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following events occurred in February 1903:

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February 20, 1903: King Edward VII approves new flag of Australia
... to replace previous Australian flag

February 1, 1903 (Sunday)

February 2, 1903 (Monday)

February 3, 1903 (Tuesday)

February 4, 1903 (Wednesday)

  • President Terencio Sierra of Honduras resigned and turned power over to a council of ministers headed by Juan Ángel Arias Boquín. At Amapala, the Honduran rebel leader Manuel Bonilla declared announced his intention to become the president of the republic.[5]
  • The Espingole struck a rock at Cavalaire-sur-Mer, sustaining a large hole in the bottom of the hull, and sank in Cavalaire Bay after its sister ship, Hallebarde rescued the 62-man crew.[6] Lieutenant Marcotte de Sainte-Marie was court-martialed and would not be acquitted until seven years later.
  • Born: Alexander Imich, Polish-born American parapsychologist and chemist, in Częstochowa (died 2014)

February 5, 1903 (Thursday)

February 6, 1903 (Friday)

  • Brazilian forces invaded Bolivia and captured the border town of Puerto Alonzo.[5]
  • U.S. president Theodore Roosevelt declined a request to serve as arbitrator of the priority of treatment of claims by Britain, Germany and Italy for reparations from Venezuela.[5]
  • Born: Claudio Arrau, Chilean pianist, in Chillán (died 1991)

February 7, 1903 (Saturday)

  • Striking bituminous coal miners in the United States agreed to accept an offer of a 14% increase in their wages, ending the UMWA strike.[5]
  • In negotiations in Washington, DC, between Germany and the United Kingdom to settle the "Venezuela Affair" a dispute between the two nations over reparations from Venezuela, Germany's Ambassador to the U.S. revealed that Germany and Italy had made a secret agreement for any settlement to apply to Italy's interests as well. The British ambassador, Sir Michael Herbert, declared that "Its discovery at this late hour cannot affect the settlement of the Venezuelan affair."[10]
  • Striking streetcar workers in Montreal accepted a settlement with the city's railway system, recognizing their right to form a labor union and granting them a 10% increase in their wages.[5]
  • Died: James Glaisher, 93, English meteorologist and aeronaut[11]

February 8, 1903 (Sunday)

  • Born:
    • Greta Keller, Austrian cabaret singer and actress, in Vienna (died 1977)
    • Tunku Abdul Rahman, Malaysian politician, first Chief Minister of the Federation of Malaysia, in Alor Setar, Kedah[12] (died 1990)

February 9, 1903 (Monday)

  • In Britian, the Midlands Railway successfully tested a new compound engine that would allow trains to attain the speed of 82 miles per hour (132 km/h).[5]
  • The Kingdom of Bulgaria asked foreign powers to aid in halting the Ottoman Empire's military preparations for an invasion at Adrianople and Monastir.[5]
  • The U.S. state of Alabama created its 67th and last county, Houston County, from parts of Dale County, Geneva County and Henry County, with the city of Dothan as its county seat.
  • The oratorio Marie-Magdeleine, by Jules Massenet with libretto by Louis Gallet and staging , was performed for the first time, with Pauline Viardot singing at Nice in France.[13].
  • Born: Georg Trexler, a German composer, in Prima, Germany (died 1979)

February 10, 1903 (Tuesday)

February 11, 1903 (Wednesday)

February 12, 1903 (Thursday)

February 13, 1903 (Friday)

  • Britain, Germany and Italy reached a settlement with Venezuela, ending the naval blockade imposed because of the country's refusal to pay foreign debts and reparation for damages suffered by European citizens in the Federal War, and bringing an end to the Venezuelan crisis. The settlement was achieved through American intervention by means of the Washington Protocols.[19]
  • Born: Georges Simenon, Belgian writer, in Liège (died 1989)

February 14, 1903 (Saturday)

The United States Department of Commerce and Labor was created as U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt signed a bill into law for a new cabinet-level department ""to foster, promote, and develop the foreign and domestic commerce, the mining, manufacturing, shipping, and fishing industries, the labor interests, and the transportation facilities of the United States."[20][21]

February 15, 1903 (Sunday)

February 16, 1903 (Monday)

  • President Palma of Cuba signed an agreement permitting the U.S. Navy to build coaling stations on the island for refueling.[5]
  • Romanian inventor Traian Vuia told the Académie des Sciences of Paris about his procedure for taking off in a heavier-than-air mechanical machine. His ideas were rejected.[23]
  • Born: Edgar Bergen, American ventriloquist and actor, in Chicago (died 1978)

February 17, 1903 (Tuesday)

  • A protocol at Washington was signed between Venezuela and the U.S. for a commission to settle claims by American citizens against the South American nation.[24]
  • King Edward VII opened the new session of the British Parliament.[24]
  • Born: Hans Linthorst Homan, Dutch politician and diplomat, in Assen (died 1986)
  • Died: Joseph Parry, Welsh composer and musician (b. 1841)

February 18, 1903 (Wednesday)

  • George B. Cortelyou, the personal secretary of President Roosevelt, was appointed by the president and confirmed the same day by the Senate as the first U.S. Secretary of Commerce and Labor.[25]
  • George Shiras Jr. announced his retirement as an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court after having recently turned 71 years old. Shiras, who had been appointed to the Supreme Court in 1892, had never served as a judge prior to being put on the highest court in the nation.[24]
  • A court in Venezuela settled the first of the U.S. claims, awarding an American businessman $700,000 in damages for Venezuela's unilateral cancellation of concession.[24]
  • Born: Nikolai Podgorny, Soviet Ukrainian politician who was the head of state of the Soviet Union from 1964 to 1977 as President of the Presidium.(died 1983)

February 19, 1903 (Thursday)

  • The U.S. Congress passed the Isthmian Canal Act, providing funding and authorization for the construction of a canal across the Isthmus of Panama.
  • The Chamber of Deputies of the Kingdom of Italy overwhelmingly rejected a bill to reduce the expenditures of the Italian Army, with 269 against and only 64 in favor.[24]
  • Germany and Venezuela formally resumed diplomatic relations.[24]

February 20, 1903 (Friday)

February 21, 1903 (Saturday)

  • After 43 ballots, the legislature of the U.S. state of Oregon finally approved its new U.S. Seantor, Charles W. Fulton.[24]
  • U.S. President Roosevelt oversaw a ceremony for the laying of the cornerstone for the building of the U.S. Army War College in Washington.[24]
  • Born:
    • Anaïs Nin, French writer, in Neuilly-sur-Seine (died 1977)
    • Raymond Queneau, French poet and novelist, in Le Havre (died 1976)

February 22, 1903 (Sunday)

February 23, 1903 (Monday)

  • Cuba leased Guantánamo Bay to the United States "in perpetuity" under the terms of the Cuban–American Treaty.
  • A volcano erupted in the Mexican state of Colima after being preceded by a series of earthquake shocks.[24]
  • The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of a federal law that prohibited the sending of lottery tickets from one of the 45 states to another. The Court ruled that the ban was within the power of Congress to regulate interstate commerce.[24]

February 24, 1903 (Tuesday)

  • The United States signed a landmark agreement with Cuba to establish a permanent naval station at Guantanamo Bay
  • Born: Vladimir Bartol, Slovene author, in Trieste, Austria-Hungary (died 1967)

February 25, 1903 (Wednesday)

  • Born: King Clancy, Canadian ice hockey player, Ottawa, Ontario (died 1986)[28]

February 26, 1903 (Thursday)

February 27, 1903 (Friday)

  • At the battle of Kwatarkwashi, forces from the British-administered Protectorate of Northern Nigeria defeated the army of the Sokoto Caliphate's Kano Emirate, effectively ending self-government of the emirate.[30]
  • The Prime Minister of Portugal resigned with his entire cabinet. A new cabinet was formed the next day.[24]
  • France and Venezuela signed a protocol for the settlement of French claims.[24]
  • Born: Grethe Weiser, German actress, in Hanover (died 1970)

February 28, 1903 (Saturday)

  • The Netherlands and Venezuela signed a protocol for the settlement of Dutch claims.[24]
  • Born: Vincente Minnelli, American director, in Chicago (died 1986)

References

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